Burton's parents relocated from the
West Indies to the United Kingdom in the 1960s, and he attributes his love for music to early childhood home experiences, which included listening to older siblings rehearse their instruments, and family spiritual gatherings, where singing would take place, often in harmony. He attended the Ryelands Primary School in
South Norwood, where he was actively involved with music, including playing in the newly formed steel band. His participation in the steel band was the subject of a local newspaper feature on his music-making activity. He went on to become a choirmaster, specialising in
gospel music at the church he attended, the Selhurst Seventh-Day Adventist Church. He is still an active member of that church, and still directs the choir. He then went on to Trinity School, Croydon, on a music scholarship, pursuing 9 O-levels, and 3 A levels, and thereafter pursued his professional academic music studies at Goldsmiths College, University Of London, which is now named
Goldsmiths University. His studies included music analysis, techniques, composition, music production, performance, Classical music history, and post 1945 twentieth-century music. Whilst at the college, he won a prize for the highest marks in aural perception, and was regularly used as an accompanist for instrumentalists, and the chorus. Following graduation, he was invited back to Goldsmiths as chorus master, and director of the chamber choir. Burton's choirs first gained national attention in 1994 when The London Adventist Chorale and the Croydon Seventh-Day Adventist Gospel Choir were two of the three finalists in the Sainsbury's Choir of the Year competition, broadcast nationally in the UK on
BBC television. The London Adventist Chorale won that year. His choral activities also involves directorship of BBC
Songs of Praise session choir, Adventist Vocal Ensemble (AVE). His orchestral music has been played by several of the UK's leading orchestras, among them
BBC Orchestra and CBSO, and in programmes including the BBC Proms. He has worked as a musical director, arranger, and collaborator with opera singers
Bryn Terfel and
Lesley Garrett, gospel singers
Donnie McClurkin,
Andraé Crouch and
Helen Baylor, and has worked as a session musician for the UK's largest television show, "
The X Factor", and the "
US X Factor". He has contracted choirs, recorded soundtrack choral parts (some of them his own arrangements) for leading artists including
Beyoncé,
Christina Aguilera,
will.i.am,
Robbie Williams, and
Leona Lewis. In 2010, he was asked to assist in shaping an arrangement for a song of
Lord Andrew Lloyd Webber. This song was to be a gospel flavoured arrangement of Webber's "Love Never Dies", to be recorded by
Nicole Scherzinger. The song was subsequently recorded, produced by
Nigel Wright, with choral arrangements by Annie Skates. Burton provided the choir. In 2007, he was commissioned to write a piece of music for double chorus, for a
BBC Radio commemorative broadcast to commemorate the bicentenary of the
Abolition of the Slave Trade Act. This piece was performed by the London Adventist Chorale and the choir of
St John's College, Cambridge. A number of other collaborative pieces were written and subsequently recorded by the two choirs, although to date the recording has not been released. Burton has produced a number of recordings with the Croydon Seventh-Day Adventist Gospel Choir, the first being a selection of songs titled "Until We Reach". Burton has been presented to
Queen Elizabeth II on five occasions: two Commonwealth days, Golden Jubilee 2002 (where he directed the London Adventist Chorale singing two of his arrangements of African-American spirituals at
Buckingham Palace), the re-opening of the
Royal Festival Hall Royal Gala Concert, and at a special jubilee multi-faith environment programme. All three of the choral entities he looks after (The Croydon SDA Gospel Choir, London Adventist Chorale and Adventist Vocal Ensemble) have performed, either uniquely or in collaboration, for numerous concerts attended by Her Majesty The Queen and other members of the royal family. He has also been presented to the former Prince, now King, Charles on several occasions. In February 2013, Ken Burton was a guest presenter for the
BBC Radio 3 programme "The Choir". He presented a programme on choral gospel music which mixed with other genres. In May 2013, he contracted a choir under the name Ken Burton Voices to perform at the
Cannes Film Festival for
Steven Spielberg, the head of the festival's 2013 jury. The choir performed "
Miss Celie's Blues" from the film
The Color Purple; the piece was arranged and conducted by jazz trumpeter
Guy Barker; the lead vocalist was jazz singer Krystle Warren, and Grant Windsor was the accompanist. Burton was a judge on the new eight-part series of
BBC2's
Sing While You Work, filmed in September 2013, with fellow judges
Paul Mealor, and international soprano
Sarah Fox. In March 2014 Burton led the Hertford Choral Society's "Raise Your Voice" event. for the vocal ensemble Voces8. This was premiered in the group's Live From London virtual concert. ==Covid-19 programmes==